You don't even need that. Take a piece of anything (cardboard) and make a pin hole. An inverted image will be projected from the pinhole. (Camera obscura)
Ecology- MMG
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 16442
- Joined: Fri Jun 28, 2013 8:38 pm
- Location: USA, Zone 5b, Koppen Dfa, Elev. 620ft, Walkscore 77
- Contact:
Re: Ecology- MMG
Re: Ecology- MMG
A gringo just told me... "The Mayans use a metal bowl of water" to capture the image. Sounds like a nice alternative to peering thru a TP tube!
Re: Ecology- MMG
Yes and apparently it's a criminal offence to disturb any nesting birds so for the record I definitely didn't do anything like spray then with water then destroy their nests and spend a whole morning scraping off pidgeon feces from from the balcony floor which seems to be acidic so it takes off the varnish.mountainFrugal wrote: ↑Wed Jul 05, 2023 5:47 pm@chenda - pigeons are hard to handle. You essentially have to remove the nest while they are out and replace the area where they were nesting with spikes or some other way to discourage them from rebuilding the nest.
This morning I woke up to find a dead pidgeon on the balcony, a sort of final 'fuck you Chenda'. I've got nowhere to bury it so I might drop it into the road tonight so the street cleaners suck it up. Or maybe I should try eating it ?
- mountainFrugal
- Posts: 1280
- Joined: Fri May 07, 2021 2:26 pm
Re: Ecology- MMG
Ha! I am glad you are following the law to a T. How did the disposal go? Down the gullet or into the street?
Yesterday we had multi-species standoff in the front yard. There is a family of woodpeckers that nest in the oak tree in the front yard. They use the old telephone pole as a nut cache. There was a mast year for acorns 2 years ago, but since then, there have been very few acorns. The woodpeckers still have a good cache as far as I can tell. A squirrel was attempting to raid the cache on the telephone pole. The woodpeckers were dive bombing it and forcing it to the bottom third of the pole. During the commotion, the neighborhood cats started moving in. The cats (siblings) moved to the bottom of the telephone pole and were waiting for the squirrel. Another cat joined the wait under a vehicle parked on the street. The cats would jump up and the squirrel would dart up the pole. The woodpeckers (7!) would dive bomb the squirrel and force it down. The cycle repeated for at least 15 minutes. We left for a MTB ride and did not get see the conclusion, but the cats and squirrel were no longer in the area when we finished up the ride a few hours later.
Re: Ecology- MMG
Pidgeon has been laid to rest in the street. I felt slightly guilty about it although I decided eating was a bad idea as it might have swallowed poison or something. It made a surprisingly loud splat sound on the road.mountainFrugal wrote: ↑Mon Oct 16, 2023 12:24 pmHa! I am glad you are following the law to a T. How did the disposal go? Down the gullet or into the street?
Hehe that pole stash must be the centre of animal geopolitics.
- mountainFrugal
- Posts: 1280
- Joined: Fri May 07, 2021 2:26 pm
Re: Ecology- MMG
I have been noticing lichens a lot lately. I went backpacking last summer and there were some stunning multicolored lichens on rocks along the trail. There are even some local varieties that grow on the concrete sidewalks that do not have a lot of foot traffic. Lichens are a symbiosis between photosynthetic bacteria/algae and a fungus. They can change color rapidly when they are re-wet (if in dry habitats). Lots of other Lichen facts over at the wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lichen
Re: Ecology- MMG
At my northern permaculture project, the ground was covered with reindeer lichen, wintergreen, and wild blueberry. Very beautiful in autumn with the whitish-gray of the lichen, deep green of the wintergreen, and scarlet of the blueberry foliage.
Re: Ecology- MMG
Perched on a bridge looking over a concrete damn slowing the flow of water in a creek, I watch a great blue heron motionless in the water, hardly moving an inch. After a few minutes, a couple of river otters emerge from the bushes on the stream bank and slither into the water to join the heron.
@MF: I love your multi-species standoff story! Around my house I see a lot of squirrel and bird interactions due to the ample food sources provided by all the fruit trees.
@MF: I love your multi-species standoff story! Around my house I see a lot of squirrel and bird interactions due to the ample food sources provided by all the fruit trees.
- mountainFrugal
- Posts: 1280
- Joined: Fri May 07, 2021 2:26 pm
Re: Ecology- MMG
The local story is a decent amount of rain this month, but the storms are coming in warmer so no snow in town yet. There is snow at higher elevations and gradually the snow levels are creeping down. Last year we had already put in 15 days of skiing by now.
What are things like in your neck of the woods? Yes, I am talking to you thread/forum lurker. Any recent nature observations? Birds acting funny? Bees going dormant for the winter? Bears acting a fool?
What are things like in your neck of the woods? Yes, I am talking to you thread/forum lurker. Any recent nature observations? Birds acting funny? Bees going dormant for the winter? Bears acting a fool?
Re: Ecology- MMG
I saw about 20 buzzards together in the air. I first thought they were crows. Do (young) Buzzards gather? 1200 m Austrian Alps yesterday.
Re: Ecology- MMG
I’m in the Chicagoland area visiting family. It’s been very warm here. With no snow on the ground, the Canada Geese are still around and feeding on the grass. My mom has a bird feeder right outside the kitchen window that gets a lot of visitors. I enjoy seeing who shows up each day. So far there’s been doves, chickadees, a woodpecker, jays, and gray squirrels. When there’s snow, the deer will come up to the feeder as well, but they’ve remained closer to the edge of the forest with the mild weather.
Re: Ecology- MMG
It rained moderately a week ago and there is still moisture at the top level of soil/sand, which I've never seen persist longer than a day or two. Our creek runs in the morning now, and there is at least one drainage with surface water flow that I've literally never seen flow except during a storm. I recall almost exactly a year ago a neighbor telling me that in the past ten months we'd had 2inches of precip.
I was on a walk yesterday and saw a crow perched on top of a Joshua, staring at me. I stopped. It flew at least 8 circles around me before I began to move again.
It's warmer than usual here now and much warmer than last year.
I was on a walk yesterday and saw a crow perched on top of a Joshua, staring at me. I stopped. It flew at least 8 circles around me before I began to move again.
It's warmer than usual here now and much warmer than last year.
Re: Ecology- MMG
We are on the Cornwall-Devon border currently and the theme is similar here, much milder than the year before. There's also been a lot of precipitation (which is saying something, as where we are is a temperate rainforest). The rivers are running much higher and faster than I recall a year ago. The ground is heavy clay, and on a walk I last did in March, I noticed considerable erosion on the riverbank.
- mountainFrugal
- Posts: 1280
- Joined: Fri May 07, 2021 2:26 pm
Re: Ecology- MMG
Very wet snow in town (4 cm). 10-20 cm up higher in elevation. I drove up a forest road with some visiting friends intending to make some ground level snow observations next to one of the local weather stations, but the snow was too deep and slushy to make it the final 4 km. My friends are not snow peeps (city slickers! ha!) so we turned around. We walked along some lower elevation trails with patchy snow. We saw some Mallard ducks and some Nothern Pintails in a lake doing their thang duckin' off (scientific term ).
- mountainFrugal
- Posts: 1280
- Joined: Fri May 07, 2021 2:26 pm
Re: Ecology- MMG
I followed a squirrel track from tree to tree and some dog tracks yesterday in the 2 cm of fresh dry snow. Cold snow like this is compressible enough to capture lots of detail and near perfect register, and just deep enough to capture nail drag along the surface. I could see the nails drag along the surface as the foot left the ground. It also makes for satisfying out and back running. I can enjoy the tactile crunch of the snow on the way out and take a look at my tracks on the way back. I noticed my right foot was landing slightly outward. It was a subtle change that did not occur on every foot print pair, but I had enough observations to suspect something might be out of alignment. Sure enough when I got home my right hip flexor and glute were a bit tighter than my left.
What is going on in your neck of the woods?
What is going on in your neck of the woods?
- jennypenny
- Posts: 6889
- Joined: Sun Jul 03, 2011 2:20 pm
Re: Ecology- MMG
I struggle during the winter but I'm trying to take inspiration from this thread and appreciate what winter has to offer. I've discovered I love winter sunsets. They're different, and brief, but they are magical for about 15 minutes. I also thoroughly enjoy stargazing during witching hour -- the skies are crisp and full of stars. It's a wonderful way to start the day (except for that one day I heard a coyote but we won't talk about that lol).
When I was a kid we usually had snow on the ground most of the winter. When we did, I loved blue hour -- that last hour of daylight when everything turned blue.
When I was a kid we usually had snow on the ground most of the winter. When we did, I loved blue hour -- that last hour of daylight when everything turned blue.
-
- Posts: 788
- Joined: Sun Jan 27, 2019 1:21 pm
Re: Ecology- MMG
On a recent snowy hike with the family, DH noticed a lot of snow shoe hare prints. It was really cool to see so many of them, and then to notice how close and far apart some of the hops were. And even more fun to think about what was happening for the hare; were they being chased? Saw some tasty food? Heard a noisy human coming?
Re: Ecology- MMG
I flushed a roadrunner yesterday. They run, then hop up and glide long distances with their wings held out stable, and every once in a while give a microburst of flaps, before coming down. The flying/running transition is smooth - they land running about as fast as they were gliding. I love their tracks:
- mountainFrugal
- Posts: 1280
- Joined: Fri May 07, 2021 2:26 pm
Re: Ecology- MMG
The snow is melting, the morels are popping at lower elevations, and I almost cycled into a mama bear and her two very large cubs (~85% her size). They were galloping up the road towards me as I was rocketing towards them downhill on my way to the studio. Bears are plantigrade on all 4 feet so they look funny when they are running. They cut off into the woods pretty quickly after they heard my brakes being applied. The front rotor on my gravel bike is a little noisy when applied quickly.
"Unlike most other land carnivorans, bears are plantigrade. They distribute their weight toward the hind feet, which makes them look lumbering when they walk." - wikipedia
What is going on in other Northern Hemisphere springs?
"Unlike most other land carnivorans, bears are plantigrade. They distribute their weight toward the hind feet, which makes them look lumbering when they walk." - wikipedia
What is going on in other Northern Hemisphere springs?
Re: Ecology- MMG
The snow is completely gone from our garden beds as of yesterday, but there are still patches in the woods. Not long before it's all gone. The main river in the area broke up two days ago and the creek that runs through our valley is flowing strong. I crossed a different creek with baby animal over the weekend. Water was flowing on top of the aufeis; that likely won't melt for at least another few weeks. The birds are returning..geese in the meadows and I hear sandhill cranes bugling high above. Freezing nights and warm days mean just a handful of fat mosquitoes flying around. One of the best months here!*
*I may not be the most unbiased source. Mrs. Animal tells me I say this for every month.
*I may not be the most unbiased source. Mrs. Animal tells me I say this for every month.